Listen "Twilight in Washington County"
Episode Synopsis
Mitchell and Zach are trying to understand how Mitchell’s home county in Southeast Iowa developed such a strong conservation culture. Jim Frier, now 88, showed up to the interview with a box full of documentation of all the work he put into educating farmers: flyers from the twilight meetings and field days he organized, which could attract as many as 500 attendees, articles he penned promoting conservation tillage, including one that wondered, back in the 60s, whether traditional tillage systems were on their way out, and photos he took of equipment attachments folks were designing to make no-till work with their existing planters. To be sure, there were a lot of other key people who helped build a conservation movement in Washington County, but Jim Frier teaches us the value of cheerleaders.: Evening meetings helped launch a conservation cultureVideo: Mr. Johnson Goes to Washington (County, That Is)
More episodes of the podcast Field Work
What Mitchell Learned in Ohio
03/08/2022
Adaptive Grazing on the Bruski Ranch
27/07/2022
The Accidental Rancher
20/07/2022
He's All About 'Net Profit Per Acre'
13/07/2022
The Bristle Brothers Sure Do Experiment
06/07/2022
With Ray Archuleta, It's All About the Soil
29/06/2022
The Godfather of Soil Health
22/06/2022
America's First Regenerative Dairy
08/06/2022
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.